Most of you who follow this blog know my house in Oberlin is on the market. So today, we're having the first open house for it. We're frantically cleaning each room, putting a spit shine on every piece of furniture, emptying wastebaskets, tucking the extra dog bed out on the screened porch and running the Swiffer one final time over the floors. Then, we put fresh flowers in each room for added ambiance, turn it over to the real estate agents, and leave, hoping for a sale.
I can't help but compare it to the editing process. You knew that was coming, didn't you?
During editing, I go chapter by chapter over the manuscript as I format it, searching for overused words and phrases, making certain all the senses are represented equally and adequately, that I've added in description, visceral responses, some hopefully witty narrative, and given my characters solid reasons why they are resisting each other. I make certain I'm staying in one person's head throughout the entire scene. Taking care of the basics, sweeping away the heavy debris.
When I'm done with the hard edits, I'll go back over the manuscript a second time, reading it through from start to finish, putting a spit shine on each word, phrase, sentence. I look through the file of unused scenes to see if anything is worthy of being put back into the story, and if not, I empty the file. I clean each scene of extraneous materials by eliminating words and phrases that go nowhere, or add nothing to the story.
Then, I read it again. I run through the manuscript one more time, catching typos, extra commas, odd phrasing, making certain I have the same eye color for the hero throughout and that the heroine doesn't change her clothes mid-scene, unless she's supposed to. When I'm done with this read, I'll go back once more and see if there's any place I can add to the story to make it more effective. To add ambiance.
Only then do I consider my work ready for a publisher's eyes. If I'm fortunate enough to capture the eye of a publisher, they turn my manuscript over to their production department and the editing process begins again. By the time the book releases, I will have read it over and over at least seven or eight times, to the point where I have parts of it memorized. In the end, the manuscript leaves my hands, and I hope for a sale.
I just finished the final edits of A Widow's Salvation, due out September 7. It's now left my hands for good, and I'm hoping for a sale come September. Or two. Or two thousand. We'll see how it goes.
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Hey Becky, Why do we write, all that review, edit, reread, edit, tear your hair out, edit. It's never perfect enough. Why? Because we love what we do. Good luck on your sale. I want you out of there and in into something on one floor before the snow flies. Don't want you moving in the winter. Good Luck.
ReplyDeleteFrom your lips...
ReplyDeleteGreat comparison. Best on the house sale and the sales of the new book! Doris McCraw/Angela Raines
ReplyDeleteThanks, ladies. The open house was mildly successful. Hopefully, the book sales will follow suit.
DeleteHaving just gone through the sale of our house and revising my ms, I can so relate. Can't wait to read Book Eight!
ReplyDeleteI thought of you as I was composing this entry. If anyone can relate, you can.
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